logo
Julian Reese and Maryland blow out Grand Canyon 81-49 in March Madness

Julian Reese and Maryland blow out Grand Canyon 81-49 in March Madness

Fox Sports21-03-2025
Associated Press
SEATTLE (AP) — Julian Reese had 18 points and nine rebounds, and fourth-seeded Maryland pounded No. 13 seed Grand Canyon 81-49 on Friday in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
Ja'Kobi Gillespie added 16 points for the Terrapins (26-8), who will play No. 12 Colorado State on Sunday in the second round of the West Region. The Rams beat fifth-seeded Memphis 78-70.
Derik Queen, the Big Ten freshman of the year who was averaging 16.3 points and nine rebounds a game, finished with 12 points and 15 boards, becoming the first Maryland freshman with a double-double in the tournament since Jalen Smith in 2019.
Tyon Grant-Foster led Grand Canyon (26-8) with 23 points.
Led by a hardworking group of starters nicknamed the 'Crab Five,' the Terps overwhelmed the Lopes. Grand Canyon got within 44-32 early in the second half on a jumper by Ray Harrison, but the Lopes moved no closer.
Both teams got off to a slow start. Maryland led 15-10 midway through the first half and then went on an 18-1 run, capped by Rodney Rice's 3-pointer.
Maryland, an at-large entrant to the tournament after falling 81-80 to Michigan in the Big Ten Tournament semifinals, led 42-28 at the break.
Grand Canyon beat Utah Valley to win the Western Athletic Conference Tournament title and an automatic berth. It was the Lopes' third straight year in the tournament, but they failed to repeat last year's run to the second round. More than the starters
While the Crab Five all averaged in double figures during the season, DeShawn Harris-Smith contributed 11 points in 24 minutes off the bench on Friday after going scoreless in his last nine games. He hit back-to-back layups that stretched the Terps' lead to 26-12. Record breaker
Selton Miguel hit a 3-pointer with 3:08 left in the first half that gave Maryland a 39-22 lead and gave the Terps 273 3s this season, breaking the program record.
___
AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here.
recommended
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Who is Jacory ‘Bill' Croskey-Merritt? Plus: Fantasy implications of Flacco and Stafford
Who is Jacory ‘Bill' Croskey-Merritt? Plus: Fantasy implications of Flacco and Stafford

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Who is Jacory ‘Bill' Croskey-Merritt? Plus: Fantasy implications of Flacco and Stafford

Inside: Meet Jacory 'Bill' Croskey-Merritt, the Commanders' running back who caused a social media frenzy. Plus: Fantasy implications of Joe Flacco as Cleveland's starter and Matthew Stafford's injury. This article is from Scoop City, The Athletic's NFL newsletter. Sign up here to receive it directly in your inbox. When Jordan Schultz reported that presumed starting running back Brian Robinson Jr. was being shopped by the Commanders, it cracked the dam that held the average draft position of his backup, Jacory Croskey-Merritt (who goes by 'Bill'), around pick 230, behind 61 other running backs. The barriers broke last night. When Robinson was subsequently held out of Washington's preseason game and Croskey-Merritt scored the below rushing touchdown, the ensuing flood hit social media, group chats and fantasy football drafts alike. Three things you should know about the Commanders' seventh-round rookie: 1. It's a miracle he made the NFL. A zero-star recruit out of high school, Croskey-Merritt spent four years at FCS Alabama State, transferred to New Mexico for one season and joined Arizona in 2024. But eligibility issues, apparently due to a clerical error, forced Arizona to sit their starting running back after his first game (13 carries for 106 yards and a touchdown). Advertisement 2. Croskey-Merritt stood out at the East-West Shrine Bowl, when he won MVP after taking 11 carries for 97 yards and two touchdowns. 3. That performance helped vault him to RB24 in 'The Beast' and saw him drafted at that value; Croskey-Merritt was the 25th — and last — running back drafted in 2025, taken by the Commanders. Croskey-Merritt quickly impressed in Washington, his college experience well suited to OC Kliff Kingsbury's inside-zone run scheme and shotgun-heavy offense. It didn't take long for the rookie to earn practice reps with the first-team offense. 'I like the group we have; there's no doubt Bill's had some good flashes for a young guy,' said Kingsbury before the Commanders' first preseason game. Those flashes continued in Washington's two preseason games, in which Croskey-Merritt posted 70 yards and a touchdown on 18 carries. He's now 112th overall — twice as high as he was being drafted last week — in Jake Ciely's updated fantasy rankings. But remember Mark Twain's warning: 'Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and [draft Chris Rodriguez Jr.].' Instead of boarding the hype train, I'd stash Washington's other running back, Rodriguez, still free in drafts. In 2024, Rodriguez quietly posted PFF's seventh-best run grade (90.1), which ranked between Josh Jacobs and Bucky Irving. And it was Rodriguez, not Croskey-Merritt, who started with the first-team offense last night, taking six touches for a team-high 62 yards. Both Rodriguez and Croskey-Merritt are also competing with the steady Austin Ekeler, who should dominate passing-down work, making this an intriguing committee situation to monitor. Other fantasy notes from last night's 31-17 Bengals win: Have a drive, Mitch Tinsley! His third catch of the drive is a TD 🙌 Watch on ESPNStream on @NFLPlus and ESPN+ — NFL (@NFL) August 19, 2025 Over to Jake, who shares his thoughts on rookie running back situations. My two biggest takeaways from Preseason Week 2: A Dolphins running back fumbled his opportunity, while the Jaguars have a running back conundrum. Miami: I already believed rookie running back Ollie Gordon was a better fit for the Dolphins' Raheem Mostert role than Jaylen Wright, the second-year player whom Miami traded up for in last year's fourth round. I just didn't expect Gordon to seize that role immediately. Advertisement Wright not only cracked the door open for Gordon to step through, he dang-well kicked it open … or more appropriately, fell over into the door and let Gordon step over him. Wright has looked like one of the worst running backs this preseason, while Gordon has flashed and gone from lottery ticket to a mid-late round, must-draft based on upside alone. I've got Gordon 30 spots above his consensus ranking. Jacksonville: The Jaguars reversed course a bit, or maybe this was always the plan, but after Week 1, when Travis Etienne saw all of the starting team work, Etienne split nearly 50/50 with Tank Bigsby in Week 2. If Bigsby was the clear backup and timeshare piece, Etienne would be an interesting bounce-back pick with Top 20 RB upside. However, if they are going to form their own Steelers-like Najee Harris/Jaylen Warren duo, I still want Etienne in the Warren-like role, given the pass-catching value. Though that makes Etienne an RB3 instead, and there is greater bust potential now. And please: Stop wasting your bench spots. It's a big fantasy football mistake nearly everyone makes. Back to you, Jacob. Just as mild concern grew into legitimate worry, Matthew Stafford returned to Rams practice. The 37-year-old took reps in both individual drills and 11-on-11 sessions, a promising development after Stafford was held out of most August practices due to back soreness. I doubt this is the last you read of Stafford's back, however, as his aggravated disc injury has required an epidural, which, according to the Cleveland Clinic's site, stops pain signals from traveling from spinal nerves to your brain. Yikes. Sean McVay told reporters that the plan is to take things 'a week at a time,' refusing to commit to Stafford starting in Week 1. In Cleveland, naming Joe Flacco their starter might give the Browns their best Week 1 quarterback of this century. Since 2000, Cleveland's Week 1 starters are 3-21-1, completing just 55.5 percent of their passes and throwing more interceptions (32) than touchdowns (24). Flacco in Week 1? A winning record (6-5), decent completion percentage (65.3) and a positive TD-to-INT ratio (12-7). Advertisement Injured Stafford: Be wary. Since arriving in L.A. in 2021, Stafford has missed 11 games. His backups rely less on receivers (64 percent target rate compared to 71 with Stafford) while all fantasy options typically see reduced production. That increases the risk/reward of Puka Nacua, Kyren Williams and Davante Adams, whose average draft position has slightly dropped amid the news. Starting Flacco: Target tight ends. In 2023, Flacco played six games in Kevin Stefanski's Browns offense. He targeted tight ends at a 32.1 percent clip, which would've ranked behind only the Raiders (Brock Bowers), Chiefs (Travis Kelce), and Cardinals (Trey McBride) last season. David Njoku — who averaged 23.1 points per game with Flacco — is in line for a big season. Flacco is expected to start the Browns' final preseason game against the Rams, and I doubt Stafford starts opposite him. Gary Davenport has more on what the Browns can do for your 2025 fantasy team, and I'd recommend you read his section on receivers. ⭐ Ja'Marr Chase leads The Athletic's rankings of the top 25 players who are 25 years old or younger, as the collection of scouts, coaches and NFL executives ranked only one other player ahead of Jayden Daniels. 👀 A better Ladd McConkey? Daniel Popper explains how the Chargers' record-setting receiver is ready for greater success in 2025. 🚑 The 49ers are always injured. Beat reporter Matt Barrows explains why it starts with practice speed. ▶️ Yesterday's most-clicked: Zak Keefer's story on why Andrew Luck returned to football. 📫 Enjoyed this read? Sign up here to receive The Athletic's free NFL newsletter in your inbox. Also, check out our other newsletters. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

Clarendon Hills Little League celebrates end of magical season
Clarendon Hills Little League celebrates end of magical season

Chicago Tribune

time2 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Clarendon Hills Little League celebrates end of magical season

The Clarendon Hills Little League's magical summer came to an end Sunday with a loss to Hawaii in the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. While no World Series championship was in the cards for Clarendon Hills, it did bounce back from its opening-round loss to Nevada to beat Pennsylvania, meaning the team returns home with a win on their record. The positives of the experience and making it that far wasn't lost on the team. 'My dream was to play with my friends as long as possible,' said infielder Matthew Kalish. 'Just being here, learning new things about different cultures, was amazing. We spent a lot of time with the team from Japan, and being here with the international teams and all the other teams was incredible. This experience meant so much. I love and live baseball.' Teammate Henry McMahon called the experience of participating in the World Series 'the best experience I've have had in my whole life.' 'It went by so fast,' McMahon said. 'We've been practicing for a long time. Knowing there are no more games is hard to take in.' Clarendon Hills manager Brian Herold said all along that his team wasn't satisfied to 'just be there' for the World Series. But there was plenty to be positive about, even after being eliminated. 'It's an amazing experience, an accomplishment that was our goal,' Herold said. 'We quickly shifted gears when we reached this level. To play the best teams from across the world and to elevate your game, that is what we did. 'We're also very proud of our community and where we're from. We've had great support, and we're excited to come home and share our experiences with our community.' Details had not been set as of Tuesday morning, but Clarendon Hills officials said there will be some organized celebration for the team. There were watch parties set for the Sloan triangle in downtown Clarendon Hills for each of the three games the team played in Williamsport, Saturday night's moving inside local establishments due to storms. The team got off to a rough start in its first game Aug. 13, finding itself in the elimination bracket by virtue of a 16-1 loss to the Mountain Region and Nevada State champion from Las Vegas. But the team battled back Saturday night with a 3-2 victory over the Mid-Atlantic Region/Pennsylvania State champion in front of 20,000 spectators. Herold's son, Brody, pitched the entire game and was benefited by the team scoring first, manager Herold said. 'We know we play our best when we're ahead, and it put Brody at ease with a lead,' he said. Elimination came Sunday with a 9-1 loss to the West Region winner from Hawaii. Teams from Hawaii won the World Series titles in 2005, 2008, 2018, and 2022. Clarendon Hills showed resilience multiple times during its summer run, as it lost a game in district competition to Naperville, before beating the same team for the championship. After winning the Illinois state championship without a loss, Clarendon Hills was defeated by Ohio in the Great Lakes Region tournament, but came back again to beat that same team, which earned a berth in the World Series. Players on the 2025 Clarendon Hills team were Brody Herold, Jack Kaczmarski, Matthew Kalish, Christian Gernot, Connor Lazar, Sean Bolger, Jack O'Malley, Liam Harrigan, Luca Striltschuk, Hudson Lauerman, Luke Schaller and Henry McMahon.

Washington Commanders Free Agency: Veteran OT George Fant signed
Washington Commanders Free Agency: Veteran OT George Fant signed

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Washington Commanders Free Agency: Veteran OT George Fant signed

The Washington Commanders brought in several players for tryouts last week, including veteran OT George Fant. The visit went well, and the two sides reportedly stayed in contact. Fant has now reportedly agreed to terms on a free agent deal. Fant(6'5', 315 lbs, 33 yo) has been in the NFL since the Seattle Seahawks signed him as an UDFA after the 2016 NFL draft. He joins an offensive line that continues to upgrade to protect second-year franchise QB Jayden Daniels. Laremy Tunsil is the LT after Washington traded for him, and they also drafted Josh Conerly Jr in the 1st round this year to move him to RT. Fant will get a week to show coaches what he's still got before cutdown day on August 26th at 4 p.m. ET.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store